Seeley Swan to Welcome

Record Snowfalls

Recorded at Seeley Lake

(Weather Table of Daily Measurements
for November & December listed below)

by Gary NolandFor the Pathfinder
January 2, 1997

If you think you've seen a lot of snow in the past two months, your "thinking"
is right on! Just as the snow has fallen and fallen and fallen, so have
Forest Service records that have stood for the past 26 years.

Just over 14 feet of snow has fallen in November and December, making
the total for calendar year 1996 a record snowfall year, and only lagging
by 55 hundredths of an inch of breaking the record for total precipitation
for a calendar year.

Precipitation for the past calendar year has measured 29.14 inches as
of 10 a.m. Monday, Dec. 30. That compares to 29.69 inches precipitation
in the calendar year 1970, but as of this writing we still have another
night and day in the year to come up with that .55 inches precipitation
to tie or break that record.

Snowfall is another matter. "We've blown the records out,"
said Kaye Enyeart at the Seeley Lake Ranger Station who has been busy the
past few days analysing daily measurements taken by Richard Taylor, and
comparing them to past records.

There may have been something in the 1960's before they started keeping
snowfall records, but nothing on the books beats this year, especially snowfall
in November and December, she said.

November was a surprise for everyone with a record 63.5 inches of snowfall.
The previous high November for snowfall was in 1975 with a mere 39.25 inches.

But, that was just a starter. December 1996, with one day left to go,
measures in at a whopping 108.8 inches of snowfall. The previous December
high was 69.85 inches of snowfall in 1977.

The two months together total 172.3 inches of snowfall-that's 14.36 feet
of snow recorded at the Seeley Ranger Station. Right now the Forest Service
records indiate the winter of 1971-72 was the heaviest snowfall for a winter
season (October through April) with 190.5 inches. That means we only need
18 inches more of snow to break that record, and that seems like a given,
since we're just starting into our heaviest snowfall months of January and
February.